Pediatric Vancomycin Use in 421 Hospitals in the United States, 2008

被引:10
|
作者
Lasky, Tamar [1 ]
Greenspan, Jay [2 ]
Ernst, Frank R. [3 ]
Gonzalez, Liliana [4 ]
机构
[1] MIE Resources, Kingston, RI USA
[2] Thomas Jefferson Univ, Nemours Childrens Clin, Wilmington, DE USA
[3] Premier Healthcare Alliance, Premier Res Serv, Clin & Outcomes Res, Charlotte, NC USA
[4] Univ Rhode Isl, Kingston, RI 02881 USA
来源
PLOS ONE | 2012年 / 7卷 / 08期
关键词
INFECTIOUS-DISEASES-SOCIETY; AMERICA;
D O I
10.1371/journal.pone.0043258
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Background: Recommendations to prevent the spread of vancomycin resistance have been in place since 1995 and include guidelines for inpatient pediatric use of vancomycin. The emergence of large databases allows us to describe variation in pediatric vancomycin across hospitals. We analyzed a database with hospitalizations for children under 18 at 421 hospitals in 2008. Methodology/Principal Findings: The Premier hospital 2008 database, consisting of records for 877,201 pediatric hospitalizations in 421 hospitals, was analyzed. Stratified analyses and logistic mixed effects models were used to calculate the probability of vancomycin use while considering random effects of hospital variation, hospital fixed effects and patient effects, and the hierarchical structure of the data. Most hospitals (221) had fewer than 10 hospitalizations with vancomycin use in the study period, and 47 hospitals reported no vancomycin use in 17,271 pediatric hospitalizations. At the other end of the continuum, 21 hospitals (5.6% of hospitals) each had over 200 hospitalizations with vancomycin use, and together, accounted for more than 50% of the pediatric hospitalizations with vancomycin use. The mixed effects modeling showed hospital variation in the probability of vancomycin use that was statistically significant after controlling for teaching status, urban or rural location, size, region of the country, patient ethnic group, payor status, and APR-mortality and severity codes. Conclusions/Significance: The number and percentage of pediatric hospitalizations with vancomycin use varied greatly across hospitals and was not explained by hospital or patient characteristics in our logistic models. Public health efforts to reduce vancomycin use should be intensified at hospitals with highest use.
引用
下载
收藏
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Morphine Use in Hospitalized Children in the United States: A Descriptive Analysis of Data From Pediatric Hospitalizations in 2008
    Lasky, Tamar
    Greenspan, Jay
    Ernst, Frank R.
    Gonzalez, Liliana
    CLINICAL THERAPEUTICS, 2012, 34 (03) : 720 - 727
  • [22] Vancomycin and teicoplanin use in Victorian hospitals
    Robertson, MB
    Dartnell, JGA
    Korman, TM
    MEDICAL JOURNAL OF AUSTRALIA, 1999, 171 (03) : 127 - 131
  • [23] Levothyroxine Use in the United States, 2008-2018
    Brito, Juan P.
    Ross, Joseph S.
    El Kawkgi, Omar M.
    Maraka, Spyridoula
    Deng, Yihong
    Shah, Nilay D.
    Lipska, Kasia J.
    JAMA INTERNAL MEDICINE, 2021, 181 (10) : 1402 - 1405
  • [24] Observations on vancomycin use in US hospitals
    Paladino, Joseph A.
    Sunderlin, Jenna L.
    Adelman, Martin H.
    Singer, Mendel E.
    Schentag, Jerome J.
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HEALTH-SYSTEM PHARMACY, 2007, 64 (15) : 1633 - 1641
  • [25] TRANEXAMIC ACID USE IN UNITED STATES CHILDREN'S HOSPITALS
    Nishijima, Daniel K.
    Monuteaux, Michael C.
    Faraoni, David
    Goobie, Susan M.
    Lee, Lois
    Galante, Joseph
    Holmes, James F.
    Kuppermann, Nathan
    JOURNAL OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE, 2016, 50 (06): : 868 - +
  • [26] Declining Use of Electroconvulsive Therapy in United States General Hospitals
    Case, Brady G.
    Bertollo, David N.
    Laska, Eugene M.
    Price, Lawrence H.
    Siegel, Carole E.
    Olfson, Mark
    Marcus, Steven C.
    BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY, 2013, 73 (02) : 119 - 126
  • [27] Diversity of antimicrobial use and resistance in 42 hospitals in the United States
    Pakyz, Amy
    Powell, J. Patrick
    Harpe, Spencer E.
    Johnson, Chris
    Edmond, Michael
    Polk, Ron E.
    PHARMACOTHERAPY, 2008, 28 (07): : 906 - 912
  • [28] The use of etiological nomenclature of heart disease in hospitals in the United States
    Hedley, OF
    AMERICAN HEART JOURNAL, 1936, 12 : 129 - 136
  • [29] Epidemiology of pediatric hospitalizations at general hospitals and freestanding children's hospitals in the United States: 2019 update
    Freyleue, Seneca D.
    Arakelyan, Mary
    Leyenaar, JoAnna K.
    JOURNAL OF HOSPITAL MEDICINE, 2023, 18 (10) : 908 - 917
  • [30] Estimating pediatric inpatient medication use in the United States
    Lasky, Tamar
    Ernst, Frank R.
    Greenspan, Jay
    Wang, Shirley
    Gonzalez, Liliana
    PHARMACOEPIDEMIOLOGY AND DRUG SAFETY, 2011, 20 (01) : 76 - 82